: Chapter 2
The Kiss Thief
A WAR RAGED INSIDE ME as I studied every cobweb and imperfection on my bedroom ceiling that night, puffing on a cigarette.
It was just a stupid, fun tradition. Hardly a scientific fact. Surely, not all the predictions written in the notes turned out to be true. I probably wouldnât even see Wolfe Keaton ever again.
However, I was bound to see Angelo soon. Even if he canceled our date next Friday, there were many weddings, holidays, and community functions we were both attending this month.
I could explain everything, face to face. One stupid kiss wasnât going to erase years of verbal foreplay. Iâd even gone so far as imagining his remorse once he found out that I only kissed Senator Keaton because I thought it was him.
I put out my cigarette and lit another one. I didnât touch my phone, resisting the urge to send Angelo an over-apologetic, hysterical message. I needed to talk to my cousin Andrea about this. She lived across town and, since she was in her early twenties, was my sole, albeit reluctant, advisor when it came to the opposite sex.
A curtain of pinks and yellows fell over the sky as the morning rolled in. Birds sang outside our limestone manor, perched on my window ledge.
I flung an arm over my eyes and winced, my mouth tasting of ash and disappointment. It was Saturday, and I needed to leave the house before my mother got any ideas. Ideas like taking me shopping for expensive dresses and grilling me about Angelo Bandini. For all the tacky clothes and shoes in my wardrobe, I was a pretty simple gal by Italian-American royalty standards. I played my part because I had to, but I absolutely hated being treated like an invalid, airhead princess. I wore little to no makeup and liked my hair the best when it was wild. I preferred horseback riding and gardening to shopping and getting my nails done. Playing the piano was my favorite outlet. Spending hours standing in a dressing room and being assessed by my mother and her friends was my personal definition of hell.
I washed my face and slipped into my black breeches, riding boots, and a white pullover jacket. I went down to the kitchen and took out my pack of Vogues, lighting one up as I nursed a cappuccino and two Advils. A plume of blue smoke rose from my mouth as I tapped my chewed-up fingernails over the dining table. I inwardly cursed Senator Keaton again. Yesterday, at the dinner table, he had the audacity to assume that not only did I choose my way of life, but I loved it, too. He never once contemplated that maybe I merely made peace with it, choosing instead to pick my battles where I would emerge the victor over those that were already lost.
I knew I wasnât allowed to have a career. Iâd come to terms with that heartbreaking reality, so why, then, couldnât I have the only thing I still wanted? A life with Angelo, the only man in The Outfit I actually liked.
I could hear my motherâs heels clanking upstairs as she fussed about, and the whiny old door of my fatherâs office pushing open. Then I heard Papa barking at someone in Italian on the phone, and my mother bursting into tears. My mother wasnât a spontaneous crier, and my father wasnât in the habit of raising his voice, so both of these reactions piqued my interest.
I scanned the first floor with the open-plan kitchen and large living room bleeding into an immense balcony and spotted Mario and Stefano whisper-shouting between themselves in Italian. They stopped when they saw me looking.
I checked the overhead clock. It wasnât quite eleven.
Know that feeling of an impending calamity? The first shake of the ground beneath you, the first rattle of the coffee mug on the table before the brutal storm? That was what this moment felt like.
âFrankie!â Mama called out, her voice pitching high, âweâre expecting guests. Donât go anywhere.â
As if I could just up and leave. This was a warning. My skin began to crawl.
âWhoâs coming?â I hollered back.
The answer to my question presented itself not a second after I asked, when the doorbell rang just as I was about to climb upstairs and ask them what was going on.
I flung the door open to find my new archenemy, Wolfe Keaton, standing on the other side, wearing a spiteful sneer on his face. I recognized him without the mask even though heâd worn one for most of the evening yesterday. As much as I hated the man, he was born with an unforgettable face.
Decidedly aloof and infuriatingly elegant, he bulldozed into the landing in a Regent fit plaid suit and a tailored blazer. He immediately shook the morning dew from his loafers as his bodyguards trailed in after him.
âNemesis.â He spat out the word as if I was the one to wrong him. âHow are you feeling this morning?â
Shitty, thanks to you. Of course, he didnât need to know that he had any impact on my mood. It was bad enough that he deprived me of my first kiss with Angelo.
I closed the door behind him without sparing him a look, welcoming him as much as I would the Grim Reaper.
âIâm doing fantastic, Senator Keaton. In fact, I wanted to thank you for yesterday,â I mentioned as I slapped my grossly polite smile on.
âYou did?â He arched a skeptical eyebrow, getting rid of his jacket and handing it to one of his bodyguards since I hadnât offered to take it.
âYes. You showed me how a real man shouldnât behave, proving Angelo Bandini is the man for me.â His security guy hung Wolfeâs jacket on one of our hangers, ignoring my presence. Keatonâs bodyguards were different than Dadâs. They wore actual uniforms and most likely had a military background.
âAs a gentleman, you have failed me. As a con, however, I give you an A plus. Highly impressive.â I gave him two thumbs-up.
âYou are funny.â His lips were pulled tight in a flat line.
âAnd you areâ¦?â I started, but he cut me off sharply.
âAn attorney at law, and therefore extremely impatient when it comes to irrelevant chatter. As much as I would love to stand here and talk to you about our lackluster first base, Francesca, I have some business to attend to. I would advise you wait until Iâm done because our little banter today was just the preview.â
âThat was a pretty bad preview. I wouldnât be surprised if the movie tanked.â
He leaned forward, entering my personal space, and chucked me under the chin, his silver eyes lighting up like Christmas.
âSarcasm is an unbecoming trait on well-bred girls, Miss Rossi.â
âKiss-thieving wouldnât go on my list of gentlemanly things to do, either.â
âYou kissed me very willingly, Nemesis.â
âBefore I knew who you were, Villain.â
âThere will be other kisses and all of them youâll give without my asking, so I wouldnât go around making promises that are destined to be broken.â
I opened my mouth to tell him that he needed to get his head checked, but he saw himself upstairs before I could speak, leaving me on the landing, blinking away my shock. How did he even know where to go? But the answer was clear.
Heâd been here before.
He knew my father.
And he didnât like him one bit.
I spent the next two hours chain-smoking in the kitchen, pacing back and forth, and making myself cappuccinos only to throw them away after one sip. Smoking was the only bad habit I was permitted to maintain. My mother said it helped with curbing my appetite, and my father was still of a generation where it was seen as sophisticated and worldly. It made me feel grown-up, when otherwise, I knew I was being babied and sheltered.
Two of my fatherâs lawyers, and two other people who also looked like attorneys, entered our house twenty minutes after Wolfe went up the stairs.
Mama was behaving strangely, too.
For the first time since I was born, she entered Dadâs office during a business meeting. She came out twice. Once to provide refreshmentsâa task our housekeeper Clara was normally assigned to do. The second time, she got out to the hallway upstairs, mumbling hysterically to herself and accidentally knocking down a vase.
When the office door finally clicked open after what felt like days, Wolfe was the only one who came downstairs. I stood, as if awaiting some life-threatening medical verdict. His last remark had put snakes in my stomach, and their bites were lethal and full of venom. He thought Iâd kiss him again. If he asked my father for a date, though, he was going to be sorely disappointed. He wasnât Italian, wasnât from an Outfit family, and I didnât like him one bit. Three things my father ought to have taken into consideration.
Wolfe stopped at the curve of our stairs, still on the last step, silently stressing how tall and imperial he was. How small and insignificant I was.
âAre you ready for the verdict, Nem?â The corner of his lips curved sinfully.
The hairs on my arms stood on end, and I felt like I was on a roller coaster the second before it dipped. I had to take a shuddering breath and brave the waves of fear crashing against my ribcage.
âDying for it.â I rolled my eyes.
âFollow me out,â he ordered.
âNo, thank you.â
âIâm not asking,â he clipped.
âGood because Iâm not accepting.â The harsh words felt violent on my lips. Iâd never been so rude to anyone. But Wolfe Keaton earned my wrath, fair and square.
âPack a suitcase, Francesca.â
âExcuse me?â
âPack. A. Suitcase,â he repeated slowly as though my deciphering his words was the issue, and not their irrational content. âAs of fifteen minutes ago, youâre officially betrothed to yours truly. The wedding is at the end of the month, which means your silly box traditionâthanks for the story, it was a nice touch in my proposalâis intact,â he delivered the news coldly as the floor beneath my feet quaked and shattered, sending me spiraling into an oblivion of anger and shock.
âMy dad would never do that to me.â My feet seemed to glue to the ground, too scared to go upstairs and test my own words. âHe wouldnât sell me to the highest bidder.â
A slow smirk spread across his face. He feasted on my rage with open hunger.
âWho said my bid was the highest?â
I launched at him with everything I had.
Iâd never hit anyoneâwas taught that as a woman, making a scene was the most common form of the lower class. So, the slap on his cheek didnât come quite with the force I was hoping for. It was more of a swat, almost friendly, that feathered his square jaw. He didnât flinch. Pity and disinterest swirled in his bottomless, sterling eyes.
âIâm giving you a couple of hours to get your things in order. Whateverâs left here will stay here. Do not test me on the issue of punctuality, Miss Rossi.â He entered my personal space and clasped a golden watch over my wrist.
âHow could you do this?â In a heartbeat, I moved from defying him to sobbing, pushing at his chest now. I wasnât thinking. I wasnât even entirely sure I was breathing. âHow did you convince my parents to give you their approval?â
I was an only child. My mother was prone to miscarriages. She called me her priceless jewelâbut here I was, marked with a Gucci wristwatch by a stranger, the watch obviously a small portion of a much larger dowry that had been promised. My parents cherry-picked every admirer who approached me at public functions and were notoriously protective when it came to my friends. So much so, in fact, that I didnât have any friends of my own, only females who shared the Rossi name.
Every time I met girls my age, they deemed them too provocative or not sophisticated enough. This seemed surreal. But for some reason, I didnât doubt for one moment that it was also the truth.
For the first time ever, I considered my father less than a deity. He had weaknesses, too. And Wolfe Keaton had just found every one of them and exploited them to his benefit.
He shrugged into his blazer and strolled through the door, his bodyguards at his feet like loyal Labrador puppies.
I shot up to the second floor, my legs on fire, adrenaline coursing through them.
âHow could you!â The first person I aimed my anger at was Mama, who promised to have my back on the subject of marriage. I sprinted toward her, but my dad held me down and Mario grabbed my other arm. It was the first time his men were physical with meâthe first time he was physical with me.
I kicked and screamed as they pulled me out of Dadâs office while my mom stood there with unshed tears brewing in her eyes. The lawyers were all hunched in a corner of the room, staring at papers and pretending that nothing unusual had happened. I wanted to scream until the entire house crumbled and buried all of us under its ruins. To shame them, to fight them.
Iâm nineteen. I can run away.
But run away to what? I was completely isolated. I knew no one and nothing other than my parents. Besides, what resources would I have?
âFrancesca,â Papa said with a tone etched with stony determination. âNot that it matters, but it is not your motherâs fault. I chose Wolfe Keaton because heâs the better choice. Angelo is nice but almost a commoner. His fatherâs father was a simple butcher. Keaton is the most eligible bachelor in Chicago, and possibly the future president of the United States. He is also considerably wealthier, older, and more beneficial to The Outfit in the long run.â
âIâm not The Outfit!â I could feel my vocal cords shaking as the words tore from my mouth. âIâm a person.â
âYouâre both,â he retorted. âAnd as the daughter of the man who rebuilt the Chicago Outfit from scratch, you are to make sacrifices, whether you want to or not.â
They carried me toward my room at the end of the hall. Mama trailed behind us, mumbling apologies I was too freaked out to decipher. I didnât, for one second, believe that my father chose Keaton without consulting me first. But I also knew he was too proud to ever admit it. Keaton held the power here, and I had no idea why.
âI donât want the most eligible bachelor in Chicago, the president of the United States, or the Vatican pope. I want Angelo!â I barked, but no one was listening.
I am air. Invisible and insignificant, but vital all the same.
They stopped in front of my room, their grip on my wrists tightening. My body went slack when I realized they were no longer moving, and I ventured to peer inside. Clara was stuffing my clothes and shoes into open suitcases on my bed, wiping away her tears. Mama grabbed my shoulders and turned me around to face her.
âThe note said whoever kissed you would be the love of your life, didnât it?â Her red, puffy eyes danced in their sockets. She was grasping at straws. âHe kissed you, Frankie.â
âHe tricked me!â
âYou donât even really know Angelo, vita mia.â
âI know Senator Keaton even less.â And what I did know of him, I hated.
âHeâs wealthy, good looking, and has a bright future ahead of him,â Mom explained. âYou donât know each other, but you will. I didnât know your father before we wed. Vita mia, what is love without a little risk?â
Comfort, I thought and knew, no matter what, that Wolfe Keaton would make it his mission to make my life very uncomfortable.
Two hours later, I rolled through the black, wrought-iron gates of Keatonâs estate in a black Cadillac DTS.
Throughout the drive, I had begged the young, pimply driver in the cheap suit to take me to the nearest police station, but he pretended not to hear me. I rummaged through my bag for my phone, but it wasnât there.
âShoot!â I sighed.
A man in the passengerâs seat sneered, and I noticed, for the first time, that there was also a security guard in the vehicle.
Where my parents lived in Little Italy, you could find Catholic churches galore, quaint restaurants, and busy parks overflowing with kids and students. Wolfe Keaton, however, resided on the clinical and prestigious Burling Street. His was a stark white, hulking mansion, which, even among other huge houses, looked comically big. By its size, I guessed that it had required the demolition of the properties next to it. Running over others to get his way seemed to be a pattern.
Manicured lawns and elaborative medieval-styled windows greeted me, ivy and ferns crawling through the colossal structure like a womanâs possessive fingers over a manâs body.
Wolfe Keaton might have been a senator, but his money did not come from politics.
After we rolled past the entrance, two servants opened the trunk and pulled out my numerous suitcases. A woman who looked like an older and scrawnier version of Clara appeared at the door in a stern, all-black dress and pinned silver do.
She raised her chin, scanning me with a sneer.
âMiss Rossi?â
I got out of the car, hugging my bag to my chest. The jerk wasnât even present to welcome me.
She strolled toward me, her spine ramrod straight and her hands linked behind her back as she tossed an open palm in my direction.
âIâm Ms. Sterling.â
I stared at her hand without taking it. She was helping Wolfe Keaton with kidnapping and forcing me into marriage. The fact that I wasnât clubbing her with my Louboutin bag stretched my extent of civility.
âLet me show you to your wing.â
âMy wing?â I followed her on autopilot, telling myselfâno, promising myselfâthat this was all temporary. I just needed to gather my wits and formulate a plan. This was the twenty-first century. I would be next to a cell phone and a laptop and a police station soon enough, and this nightmare would be over before it could even begin.
And then what? Youâll defy your father and risk death?
âYes, dear, wing. I was pleasantly surprised by how old-fashioned Mr. Keaton was in regards to his new bride. No sharing a bed before marriage.â A ghost of a smile passed her lips. She was obviously a fan of the idea. That made the two of us. Iâd rather scratch my own eyeballs out than share a bed with the devil.
The marbled white landing presented two separate stairways leading left and right. The portrait-adorned mint-green walls of former presidents, high, elaborate ceilings, fireplaces, and lavish courtyards peeking through the tall windows all blurred together.
I gasped when we passed by open double doors with a constructed Steinway piano surrounded by floor-to-ceiling bookshelves and what looked like thousands of books. The entire room was accented in cream and black.
âYou seem young.â
âThatâs an observation, not a questionâ¦your point?â I said unkindly.
âI was under the impression he liked his female companion older.â
âPerhaps he should start by liking his female companion willing.â
Jesus. I actually said that. I slapped a hand over my mouth.
âSenator Keaton never had an issue attracting women. Quite the contrary,â Ms. Sterling blabbed as we made our way to the eastern side of the house. âToo many women and too much variety made him jaded. I was beginning to worry.â She shook her head, a reminiscing smile on her thin lips.
So on top of everything else, he was a playboy. I cringed. Angelo, for all his life experience and ruthless upbringing, was a true gentleman. Not a virginal oneâI knewâbut not a skirt chaser, either.
âThen, perhaps, I should be the one worried now since Iâm expected to share a bed with him,â I bit out. Iâd apparently checked my manners at the door, along with my freedom.
When we got to my room, I didnât stop to appreciate the canopy four-poster bed, rich velvet purple curtains, vast walk-in closet, large vanity, or even the carved oak desk and leather chair overlooking the garden. It was pushed against the window, and I had no doubt the view was mesmerizing. But I didnât care for the best view in Chicago. I wanted to be back in my childhood home, dreaming of my wedding to Angelo.
âMake yourself comfortable. Mr. Keaton had to fly out to Springfield. Heâs on his way home now.â She smoothed the hem of her dress. So he was a US senator. And I didnât have to askâI knew he had purchased a private jet prior to his political gig. I knew the Membersâ Representational Allowance by heart because my father talked about rules often. He said that in order to break them, you had to know them by heart, too. Father had paid off a lot of political figures in his lifetime.
For some reason, his having a private jet made me even more bitter. Going to work alone left a carbon footprint that would require planting a medium-sized forest to rectify. What kind of world did he want to leave for his children and grandchildren when, at a momentâs notice, he was on a jet headed to Springfield or DC?
It occurred to me that I hadnât tried to lure her into helping me. In fact, she might not even know I was in trouble. I caught her cold, fragile hand in mine and pulled her back as she made her way to the door.
âPlease,â I urged. âI know it sounds crazy, but your boss just bought me from my parents. I need to get out of here.â
She stared at me and blinked.
âOh, dear, I think I forgot to turn off the oven.â She rushed outside, the door closing behind her.
I ran after her, yanking at the door handle. She locked me in. Shoot!
I paced back and forth, then grabbed the curtain and tore it from its rails. I didnât know why I did it. I wanted to ruin something in his house the way he ruined me. I flung myself over the bed, a scream tearing at my lungs.
I cried myself to sleep that day. In my dream, I imagined Angelo dropping in for a visit at my parentsâ, finding out what happened with Wolfe, and then looking for me all over town. In my dream, he drove here, unable to bear the thought of me being with another man, and confronted Wolfe. In my dream, he took me away, somewhere far and tropic. Somewhere safe. This was the part where I knew it was a fantasyâif my father couldnât stop Wolfe, no man could.
When I stirred awake, the last rays of the sun lazily filtered through the tall, bare windows. My throat felt groggy and dry, and my eyes were so puffy I couldnât even open them all the way. I would kill for a glass of water, but I would die before asking for one.
The bed was dipped to one side. When I cracked my eyes open, I found out why.
Wolfe was sitting on the edge of the queen-size mattress. He stared at me with his piercing gaze and seemed to burn past skin and bones and hearts, turning them all to ash.
I narrowed my eyes, then opened my mouth to give him a piece of my mind.
âBefore you say anything,â he warned, pushing the sleeves of his crisp white shirt up his elbows to expose veiny, muscular, and tan forearms, âI believe an apology is in order.â
âYou think an apology is going to fix this?â I snapped acidly, tugging at the blanket to cover more of my body even though I was fully dressed.
He smirked, and I realized he liked our exchanges very much.
âItâd be a nice start. You said I was not being a gentleman, and I beg to differ. I honored your tradition and demanded your hand after kissing you.â
Unbelievable.
Now I was fully awake, my back pressing against the headboard.
âYou want me to apologize to you?â
He smoothed the soft fabric of the pressed linen, taking his time to answer me.
âShame your parents are set in their wish to keep you an obedient little housewife. You have a natural, fast grip on things.â
âYouâre a fool if you think Iâm just going to accept you as a husband.â I folded my arms over my chest.
Wolfe considered my words gravely, his fingers traveling near my ankle but not quite touching it. Iâd kick him if I didnât think heâd enjoy my anger even more.
âThe notion that you can touch me or whatâs mine in any way, other than sucking my cock whenever Iâm generous enough to allow it, amuses me. Why donât we get to know each other over dinner tonight before you make any more declarations you canât back up? There are some house rules you need to obey.â
Lord, I wanted to hurt him so badly it burned at my fingertips.
âWhy? Because Iâd rather eat rotten fruit and drink sewer water than have a meal with you,â I snarled.
âVery well.â He produced something from behind his back. A simple white calendar. He reached over and placed it on the nightstand next to me. It was a nice touch, after giving me the watch that felt more like a shackle than a gift.
When he spoke, he looked at the calendar, not me.
âIt takes twenty-one days to form a habit. I recommend you make me a pattern of sorts. Because come August twenty-second,â he announced, rising up from the bed, âyou will be standing at the altar, promising me the rest of your days. A promise I intend to take seriously. Youâre a collected debt, a retaliation, and, quite frankly, pretty decent arm candy. Good night, Miss Rossi.â He turned around and sauntered toward the door, kicking aside the curtain on his way out.
A short hour later, Ms. Sterling arrived with a silver tray containing squashed, rotten-looking fruit, and a glass of water that was freakishly gray. She stared at me with crushing misery that made her already wrinkled face appear even older.
There was an apology in those eyes.
I didnât accept it or the food.